In the policy ethos generated
by the government's economic reform, voluntary choices are often presented
as inevitable actions. Nowhere is this more evident than in the area
of trade policy. Being a signatory to the WTO, it is argued, makes
hard decisions with regard to quantitative restrictions, tariffs and
state support in the form of implicit or explicit subs idies 'unavoidable'.
Consider the situation with regard to the agricultural sector which
is still a source of livelihood for a substantial number of Indians.
In the name of India's commitments to the WTO, almost all quantitative
restrictions on imports of raw and processed agricultural products
have been withdrawn at a time when world prices have been falling
quite sharply. If this is resulting in a collapse of incomes earned
by coconut growers, rubber producers and cereal-producing farmers,
that outcome is regarded as the inevitable price that India must pay
for being a part of the international community. It is also seen as
the quid pro quo for the opportunity to engage international markets
and benefit from international trade.
There are two issues ignored by those advancing such an argument.
First, very often India's commitments have proved to be way beyond
even what the international community expects. Take for example, India's
zero tariff bindings on a range of agricultural commodities, including
the case of an item like rice which is a major crop cultivated in
the country. This had been done when India had recourse to quantitative
restrictions, but clearly, no thought had gone into what India accepted
as part of the Uruguay Round agreement in terms of the reduction of
trade restrictions since at that point of time acceptance was presented
as inevitable and unavoidable, and recourse was taken to the argument
that quantitative controls could continue since there was a balance
of payments problem. Simultaneously, however, Finance Ministry officials
went about boasting that the balance of payments was healthy and thus
evoked the demand from the US and other countries that India should
dismantle quotas. Inevitably, India lost her case for maintaining
quotas, and when the time for removing quantitative restrictions arrived,
by which time international prices had fallen significantly, this
commitment proved too much for even India's unthinking reformers to
swallow. Fortunately for the government, India's trading partners,
including the most powerful within and outside the WTO like the US
and Europe, accepted this commitment as being 'excessive'. In the
event, as part of the process of doing away the quantitative restrictions,
the government renegotiated its tariff bindings, allowing it the freedom
to raise tariffs to as much as 80 per cent from zero in the case of
rice. Put simply, neither is what India accepted inevitable, nor is
it sacrosanct once accepted.
The second issue that is ignored is the fact that even the strongest
among the world's trading nations, which would be the ones to benefit
the most from a free and liberal trade regime, are aware of the dangers
of openness and the benefits of intervention. This is most visible
in the agricultural arena, which is a site for intense conflict between
the members of the OECD, the club of the world's richest nations.
Brought into the mainstream of the multilateral trading agenda only
during the Uruguay Round, this was an area where the least concessions
were on offer from those trading blocs and nations like the EU and
Japan, which had the most to give. In the event, a traditional and
more 'labour intensive' sector proved to be one which threatened to
completely derail WTO negotiations because of what the US considered
the intransigence of the EU, Japan and some Southeast Asian countries.
The bone of contention was the massive support being offered by many
European countries to their agricultural sectors, which effectively
closed their markets to exporters from elsewhere.
It is indeed true that finally even these countries accepted some
of the rules with regard to agricultural trade that were formulated
as part of the Uruguay Round. But they as well as the US, even while
making a show of accepting WTO norms, shifted to emphasising forms
of support which were WTO compatible because they ostensibly are non-distorting
from a trade point of view. To facilitate that transition, policies
of agricultural support were conveniently placed in 'boxes' labeled
red, green and blue, with only those in the red box treated as WTO
incompatible. The shift away from red to green and blue box policies
has, of course, been combined with contentious trade barriers which
have provided the staple for the activities of the WTO's Dispute Settlement
Panel. According to a recently prepared analysis from the OECD Secretariat,
the overall cost to consumers and tax payers of the agricultural policies
of its member governments amounted to $361 million in 1999 or 1.4
per cent of GDP. Support to agricultural producers amounted to 40
per cent of the value of farm receipts.
The forms of intervention through which such support is provided include,
in the main, production subsidies and trade barriers, which according
to the Secretariat "distort production and trade, reduce economic
efficiency and may damage the environment". And those benefiting
from such support are not small or marginal farmers, but the most
productive and profitable ones. The top 25 per cent of farms as measured
by their annual sales values accounted for 90 per cent of the support
provided by these governments.
What is remarkable is that even the commitment to agricultural policy
reform in the form of reduced support and lower trade barriers is
being given up. Between 1991 and 1997, the OECD Secretariat reports,
as part of the run up to and the aftermath of the Uruguay Round, producer
support fell from just above 40 per cent of farm receipts to 30 per
cent. But over 1998 and 1999 when farm prices worldwide have been
on the decline to just above half the 1995 peak in the case of oilseeds
and wheat, the extent of support has risen sharply from 30 to 40 per
cent, that is, to levels before the adjustment to a likely post-Uruguay
world began. OECD governments clearly rate the need to protect their
richest farmers from the adverse consequences of world-price volatility,
way above their 'commitment' to a freer trade regime and a 'distortion-free'
environment.
Even the OECD Secretariat admits that all of this does not bode well
for the emerging and transition economies (ETEs), defined to include
the transition economies in Central and Eastern Europe as well as
large emerging economies such China, India, Brazil and Indonesia.
In its view, "agricultural trade barriers, export subsidies,
and domestic support in OECD countries have limited the potential
benefits of free trade in agriculture for ETEs," where "agriculture
is much more important in income and employment terms." Given
this, even the most committed among those belonging to the free trade
faith need to consider whether protection for their farmers through
means that are either WTO compatible or incompatible, should be sacrificed
at the altar of their beliefs, at a time when policies being pursued
by their trading partners substantially curtail their access to potential
markets.
The problem is that given the adoption of IMF-inspired fiscal regimes,
developing country governments, such as in India, are voluntarily
forsaking policies aimed at providing direct producer support or measures
that indirectly sustain such policies by absorbing surpluses to feed
an extensive public distribution system issuing food at subsidised
prices to the consumer. This puts them in a self-imposed double bind.
To begin with, they are not willing to imitate, rather than listen
to, developed country governments when it comes to blatantly violating
WTO commitments, and find heir markets flooded with surpluses from
abroad. Secondly, they are not sharp-witted enough to drop their obsession
with the size of the fiscal deficit at the expense of all else, even
while the IMF itself praises the Southeast Asian governments currently
engaged in pump-priming themselves out of the recession induced by
the financial crises of 1997. This limits their ability to offer WTO-compatible
support to their agricultural sectors.
In the event, developing-country governments end up opening doors
to their own markets at a time when their access to developed country
markets are being reduced, and denying their much-poorer farmers much-needed
support even while the developed countries back their rich agriculturists.
This can only be because the elite which currently governs in these
contexts has much to gain by submitting to the duplicity of western
governments, and is willing to sacrifice its farming community as
part of the bargain.
One indicator of this attitude
in the Indian context is the incompetent manner in which the present
government is dealing with the mounting stocks of wheat which have
accumulated because issue prices of food supplied through the PDS
have more than doubled over the last two years and the spread and
coverage of the PDS has not expanded enough. The result has been that
instead of the food subsidy declining with the higher issue prices,
they are showing signs of rising sharply because of increasing stockholding
costs. This simple message, which somehow seems to have eluded the
Finance Minister when he refused to roll back PDS price hikes, has
now seemed to have struck home. The recent decision to resort to open
market sales of wheat stocks in Punjab at a price linked to the economic
cost of wheat procured from that state is in effect an effort to roll-back
the prices at which the government will offload its stocks, although
not to PDS consumers but only to traders and millers. Yet, the latter
are reportedly not too willing to lift stocks even at prices substantially
below PDS prices, unless export opportunities are opened up through
export subsidies. The whole system appears to be geared to trying
to run down stocks and incur subsidies but without benefit to domestic
consumers. This is strange because while an expanded PDS would be
perfectly WTO-compatible, export subsidies in any form would not.
It would not be unexpected therefore, if soon after exports were allowed
directly or indirectly from FCI stocks, the US or Europe would call
for restrictions on the FCI's functioning or even demand that it dismantled.
If so, not only would the PDS atrophy but so would the current system
of minimum support prices. The gainers, while including domestic traders
and millers close to the party currently in power, would be international
trading giants like Cargill. The losers inevitably would be consumers
and farmers. The war would have been lost by a series of own goals
based on the fallacy that somehow all that is needed to reduce subsidies
is to make things more expensive for the poor.
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